Book Image

Java 9 Concurrency Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Javier Fernández González
Book Image

Java 9 Concurrency Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Javier Fernández González

Overview of this book

Writing concurrent and parallel programming applications is an integral skill for any Java programmer. Java 9 comes with a host of fantastic features, including significant performance improvements and new APIs. This book will take you through all the new APIs, showing you how to build parallel and multi-threaded applications. The book covers all the elements of the Java Concurrency API, with essential recipes that will help you take advantage of the exciting new capabilities. You will learn how to use parallel and reactive streams to process massive data sets. Next, you will move on to create streams and use all their intermediate and terminal operations to process big collections of data in a parallel and functional way. Further, you’ll discover a whole range of recipes for almost everything, such as thread management, synchronization, executors, parallel and reactive streams, and many more. At the end of the book, you will learn how to obtain information about the status of some of the most useful components of the Java Concurrency API and how to test concurrent applications using different tools.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Introduction

A stream in Java is a sequence of elements that can be processed (mapped, filtered, transformed, reduced, and collected) in a pipeline of declarative operations using lambda expressions in a sequential or parallel way. It was introduced in Java 8 and was one of the most significant new features of that version, together with lambda expressions. They have changed the way you can process big sets of elements in Java, optimizing the way the language processes those elements.

Streams have introduced the Stream, DoubleStream, IntStream and LongStream interfaces, some utility classes such as Collectors or StreamSupport, some functional-like interfaces such as Collector, and a lot of methods in different classes such as the stream() or parallelStream() methods in the Collection interface or the lines() method in the Files class.

Through the recipes of this chapter, you will learn how to effectively use streams...